Wednesday, November 27, 2002 Continued from pg 5 MISCELLANEOUS Cavitt Corner. Used books, collectables, furniture and antiques. 2100 Cavitt, Bryan. 979-822-6633. MOTORCYCLE 01 Harley Buell blast 500 like new $3195. 98 Ninja ZXS6R exhaust, red, perfect $4895. 281-960-6488 1994 Ninja 600R, runs great, $2600 obo, 739-2731. 2001 Kawsaki Ninja, 250-cc, runs great, well kept, $2600. 764-6402 PETS “A Home of their Own" holiday adoption specials. (Best selection of cats and kit tens is now!) The Cats Cradle 820-0599. Adopt Pets: Dogs, Cats, Puppies, Kit tens. Many purebreds. Brazos Animal Shelter, 775-5755, www.shelterpets.org AKC, OFA Choc Lab pups both parents hunt. First shots, wormed, dew claws re moved $300-$400. 220-3863 Sugargliders: Bathe & clip. $20- 1st visit. 979-696-2533. Tame & leash-trained baby Sugargliders. Call 696-2533. CD with book. REAL ESTATE Free quick over- the- net market analysis of your property www.AndrewSmithOnline.com or call 693- 7653. Century 21 broker ROOMMATES 1 or 2 roommates needed in January. $450/mo. Canyon Creek Townhomes. Call 713-504-1889 1, 2, or 3 roommates needed in January, $370 each plus 1/3 bills, great apartment and amenities, call 694-3163. 1-F needed ASAP, 2bd/2bth condo, $300/nego. Call 817-705-3476 or 693- 3997. 1-F needed for Spring semester, large 4bdrm/2bth house, S350/mo +1/4bills. Great location near A&M and Blinn. Am ber or Brooke 979-492-8838 or 575-7888. 1 -female needed asap for spring semester 4bd/2ba $325.75/mo +1/4bills. new house 803 Azalea 696-0128 1- Female roommate needed for spring se mester, 4bd/2.5bth house, $3O0/mo. + 1/4bills. Please call Alisa or Jessica at 979-775-0381. Thanks. 1 -M needed to sublease Spring semester. 3bd/2ba house, on shuttle $317/mo +1/3bills call John 694-7759 2- F needed in large 3/2 duplex, no pets, $325/each +1/3bills. Call Jenny for details 680-8952. 2-roommates, huge Sbdrm loft apt. down town Byran. $400/mo all bills paid. Clate 979-574-6669, Jake 979-257-9005. 3rd-guy needed in 3bdrm house for Spring '03. $215/mo. Great location! 693-1777 F-roommate needed for 3/2 furnished house. $350/mo., 817-371-5690 F-roommates needed 3/2 Bryan house near Blinn/A&M $350/Vno +split bills, de posit spacious rooms, fenced yard, cov ered parking, pets allowed 823-0021. Female roommate, new home 3/2/2, shut tle, w/d. cable internet, $325 +1/3bills. 695-8074, 210-383-8524. M/F needed asap for 2/1 apartment, $160 + 1/3 electricity/ month, Ryan- 979-695- 9406, cell- 832-643-3434. M/F roommate wanted 2/1.5 townhouse close to campus masterbd with private balcony $315 +1/2bills 979-574-7283 Male roommate to share 3/2 home, 5 blocks to TAMU, $400/mo. (with all utilit ies) 512-567-8325, 979-693-2177. Nice 3/2 house short distance to Blinn/ A&M. Everything furnished including bed room suit. $350/mo +1/3util. 224-4400 Roommate needed for Spring semester, $297/mo. +1/2bills. Call Clint 693-7864. Seeking responsible/clean male room mate to rent furnished room in 4/2 house after Dec. 15th. Includes study, all kitchen utensils and furniture. Nice front yard and great backyard deck. $380/mo. Troy 979- 764-8822 SERVICES A&Mvs. Texas. Local charter for lease. Group rate available or $20/seat. 979- 779-8537. AAA Texas Defensive Driving. Lots-of- fun, Laugh-a-lotM Ticket dismissal/insur ance discount. M-T(6pm-9pm), W- Th(6pm-9pm), Fri.&Sat.- Fri(6pm-8pm) &Sat(10am-2:30pm), Sat(8am-2:30pm). Inside BankofAmerica. Walk-ins wel come. $25/cash. Lowest price allowed by law. 111-Univ. Dr., Ste.217. 846-6117. Show-up 30/min. early. Mason’s Mobile Car Repair- on the spot repairs 828-4832 TRAVEL ***Act Fast! Save $$$, Get Spring Break Discounts!... 1 888 Think Sun (1-888-844- 6578dept2626)/ www.springbreakdiscounts.com '"At Last!! Spring Break Is Near!** Book now for... Free Meals, Parties & Drinks. 2-Free Trips. Lowest Prices. sunsplashtours.com .1 -800-426-7710 Spring Break 2003. Travel with STS Americas #1 Student Tour Operator. Ja maica, Cancun, Acapulco, Bahamas, or Florida. Sell Trips, Earn Cash, Travel Free! Information/ Reservations 1-800- 648-4849 or www.ststravel.com Consumers seek protection after hearing of identity theft scheme IF YOU ORDERED a 2003 Aggieland and will not be on campus next fall to pick it up, you can have it mailed. To have your yearbook for the '02-03 school year mailed, stop by room 015 Reed McDonald Building or telephone 845-2613 (credit cards only) between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday and pay a $7 mailing and handling fee. Cash, Check, Aggie Bucks, Visa, MasterCard, American Express and Discover accepted. NEW YORK (AP) Numerous consumers moved to try to protect their finances and credit lines Tuesday, a day after prosecutors warned that thou sands of people were vulnerable to a high-tech assault on their identities after records were stolen from a software compa ny. “It’s just been a deluge,” said Jay Foley, director of consumer and victims services at the Identity Theft Resource Center. The San Diego-based nonprofit organization, which helps vic tims of identity theft, was among several agencies nation wide swamped with calls Tuesday. Callers were worried they might be victims of a massive scheme to steal credit infonna- tion from thousands of people. Losses from the scam were put at $2.7 million and could grow as more victims are identified. U.S. Attorney James B. Comey said Monday that prose cutors were still trying to learn how many people had their bank accounts drained, addresses changed, lines of credit opened and new credit cards opened without their approval. He said almost all the fraudu lent charges and withdrawals would be covered by financial institutions. Prosecutors are sending letters to victims that can be used as proof to credit agen- ► Keep a close guard on personal information. Don’t throw any information pertaining to your access codes, Social Security number or credit card numbers in the trash. ► When choosing PIN numbers and ID numbers, make sure they are not easily replicated. Guarding against identity theft Though identity theft can’t be prevented, there are some ways people can minimize their risk. ► Get your credit reports annually from each of the three credit bureaus. Equifax, Experian and Trans Union. ► If your bills don’t arrive on time, check with your creditor. ► Pay close attention to your bills, criminals can charge to your credit card or withdraw from your bank account. NOTE: For more information, go to the Federal Trade Commission's Web site at www.ftc.gov or call the toll-free phone number at 877-IDTHEFT SOURCES: Federal Trade Commission: Chubb Group of Insurers cies and financial institutions. Claudia Farrell, a Federal Trade Commission spokes woman in Washington, said calls to a hot line for people reporting identity fraud increased 33 percent Monday, while calls seeking infonnation about identity theft doubled. “I think there’s another uptick today,” she said Tuesday. Authorities said the scheme began about three years ago when Philip Cummings, an employee at a Long Island soft ware company, sold passwords and codes for downloading con sumer credit reports to an unidentified person. Cummings, 33, of Cartersville. Ga., was released on $5(X).(XX) bond after a court appearance in Manhattan on Monday at which he did not speak. The FBI also charged two other men in the case. Officials credited the Ford Motor Credit Co., the world’s largest automotive finance com pany, with discovering the fraud last winter. Personal information belong ing to some 30,000 people was stolen, authorities said. Included were 15.000 credit reports stolen from Experian. a credit history bureau, using passwords belonging to Ford Motor Credit Corp., a finance arm of Ford Motor Co. in Dearborn, Mich., officials said. A message left with Experian was not immedi ately returned Tuesday. Melinda Wilson, a spokes woman for the Ford credit com pany, said only a few Ford cus tomers were affected and the company, a victim itself, went to authorities immediately. “We didn’t know what we had at first. We just kept digging and digging and unraveling and pulling, trying to get to the bot tom of it.” she said. "This was a breach that was made falsely in our name and. as such, it was deeply disturbing.” Libby Hutchinson, a spokes woman for the Washington Mutual Finance Co., said the company, based in Crossville, Term., had sent out 6,(XX) letters to warn people that its access codes had been stolen. “We’re not aware of any amount of money that anyone has lost. Sadly, that might change,” she said, noting an increase in inquiries by the pub lic since Monday. Some people w ho got letters “were concerned, actually think ing we were trying to scam them,” she said. “We had to assure them it was legit and gave them con tacts at the FBI and other law enforcement agencies,” she said. China opens first suicide prevention center BEIJING (AP) — One day next week, three nurses will sit down at telephones in Beijing and do something that would have been unheard of in China just a decade ago: They’ll try to stop anyone who calls from committing suicide. As 1.3 billion people cope with the most sweeping changes their nation has ever expe rienced, China’s first suicide research and prevention center is opening in the capital with a lengthy list of priorities — everything from intervening in emergencies to changing outdated attitudes about mental health. It’s a tall order for a populace accustomed to centuries of gritting their teeth through hard times and coping with “chiku” — a tra ditional metaphor for enduring hardship that means, literally, “eating bitter.” “The changing culture and society have given us an opening,” said Dr. Michael R. Phillips, executive director of the new Beijing Suicide Research and Prevention Center and a physician in China for 18 years. The center, which opens next week, employs 1 1 doctors and 13 nurses, most of them Chinese. It will offer a range of ser vices, from the toll-free hot line, to counsel ing and crisis intervention, to comprehensive research — already under way — on suicide and attitudes toward it. But doctors see an entirely non-clinical NEWS IN BRIEF As China develops, we have to pay more attention to this kind of health issue. — Zhang Jianshu Beijing Bureau of Health official development as the most significant sign of changing attitudes: The center is at a pub lic facility, Huilongguan Hospital, and is being funded quite willingly by Beijing’s city government. “Suicide and depression, they're definite ly something that goes hand in hand with our fast development,” said Zhang Jianshu. an official at the Beijing Bureau of Health, which contributed $242,000. “As China develops, we have to pay more attention to this kind of health issue.” Though there is no standard reporting system for deaths in China, researchers using available figures extrapolate that 287,000 Chinese kill themselves each year, making suicide the No. 5 cause of death in the world’s most populous country. Some 2 mil lion Chinese try to kill themselves annually. Even more alarming to researchers: Suicide is the No. 1 cause of death for Chinese ages 15 to 34, and women have a 25 percent higher rate than men. In addition, rural suicide rates are three times as high as urban rates. “Clearly, this is one of modem China’s most important issues,” said Dr. Liang Hong, the center’s clinical services director and head of the China end of the International Depression Project, a research consortium with fellow developing nations India and Colombia. “Older people don’t know much about mental health. People in the countryside, they have no idea they can get help,” she said. “People in China don’t think this is something to see a doctor about.” Though the center is new, its physicians have been doing research on suicide for years. Their latest paper, on why and how Chinese kill themselves, was compiled from scores of interviews with suicide victims’ families and will be published Friday in the British medical journal Lancet. Beyond helping people directly, the cen ter hopes to serve as a model — first for Beijing’s 500 hospitals, and eventually for the rest of the country. It is surveying 50 top hospitals in the capital to determine how they can start anti-suicide programs and train doctors. NEWS THE battalia U-N. REPORT; Forced i prostitution flourishes in Bosnia Man behind Wendy’s robbery-murders gets death penalty NEW YORK (AP) — The man behind a robbery-massacre at a Wendy’s restaurant was sen tenced to death Tuesday, more than two years after he and an accomplice herded seven employees into a freezer and murdered five of them. John Taylor, 38, stood stone faced as the jury’s decision was read while the victims’ family wept quietly in the courtroom. He was sentenced to die by injection for killing two of the employees, but prosecutors say he plotted the attack and commanded his men tally retarded accomplice to kill. Taylor joins five other men on death row in New York. The state has not executed an inmate since 1963. According to prosecutors, Taylor and Craig Godineaux were eating in the Queens restau rant just before closing. Taylor’s lawyers admitted their client shot Auguste, but said Godineaux shot everyone else. Prosecutors, however, said Taylor planned the crime, gunned down two people and ordered Godineaux to kill the rest. Godineaux, 32, pleaded guilty last year to shooting five of the victims, three fatally. He was ineligible for the death penalty because he is retarded, and instead received five life sentences. 15-year-old unable to identify person she said raped her MINEOLA, N.Y. (AP) — A 15-year-old girl who said she was kidnapped and raped by a couple she met over the Internet sur prised prosecutors Monday by failing to identify one of the defendants. After taking the witness stand, the girl was asked if she saw defendant James Warren in the courtroom. Warren was sitting at the defense table. “No, I don’t see James Warren here,’’ the girl replied. “No.” Asked by prosecutor Gregg Turk in to describe her abuser, she testified he was tall and had long hair. Warren, who once had long hair, now has a buzz cut. The girl was to resume testify ing Tuesday. Authorities say Warren, 42, and another defendant, Beth Loschin, 47, took the teen from Massachusetts to Long Island after meeting her online last year. They say the girl was held cap tive for a week and sexually abused by the couple and another man before being rescued by police. Warren could serve 25 years to life if convicted on charges that include kidnapping, rape, sodomy and attempted murder. Defense attorney Dennis Kelly said the alleged victim had told Warren she was 18, old enough to consent to sex. SARAJEVO, Herzegovina (APf 1 1 rat Tickers who force % sands of women and girls in prostitution in Bosnia ^1, face justice, and some em serve with the U.N. pe^ keeping force, Human Ri^ W atch said in a repon released Tuesday. International officials a Bosnia who enjoy diploma immunity from crimicjl charges have created an envi ronment in which traffic!® and prostitution can tfe said die 76-page repon. It said the victims are ua ally young women, include minors, from East Europe?, countries who are pronisd decent jobs in the Wesi- only to end up in brothel'i Bosnia. The traffickers, moah Bosnians, usually get aw with their crimes even I caught. Trafficking laws an largely not enforced and"® ruption within the Bom" police force allowed the traf ficking of women andgiilsio flourish,” the report said. Human Rights Watch sail it also found evidence of involvement in traffickk- related offenses by mente of the U.N. international police force, or IPTF.wtidiis charged with monitoringW police. At least eight Amen® scr\ ing with the J.OOO-imi her I PTE have been M for offenses ranging from Into to sexual impropnety Human Rights M investigators also fomio'i- deuce that some ci*®- tractors hired to pnwi#' tical support for US-®®) forces serving the NAlw peacekeeping force into® were engaged in the puPS of women and »'• “Deployed to promotete* of law, a small numte IPTF monitors instead^ engaged in illegal activ® either as customers of t® ticked women or as outn? purchasers of tr.f®( women and their passports, the report said. , When caught, the o . punishment policemen face is be" 1 ? home, because m Bosnia J. enjoy immunity and i home countries they ar prosecuted, the report saifl- A 1 come patheti ologic. etent t jovermi iedigi pinion The enate i lot-Kic he act iring c ccordii Whe du doi overni omain use fc “The aygro te easi tat m a farkey aid in ; How iseless torn ac nternet For e lomain vith the Vashin. rom a . top hit nto the Furtl mate f< 'erence: of deve compan of enfa Washing But ; vournat jn San 1 ave ac arents ffensh Elepl para< w/ Matt Mead Live at HENRYS hideout www f 1 c 7 ha’s I iideoutc BEAT TIL are game parti' Nov 27th ( 2 Horns vs. Ags IVfiere are you gonna watch the game. 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